Friday, July 27, 2012

Call Me Avedon

Jim 30, 2012

[Click on image to enlarge.]

Yesterday I did
something I’ve never done before. I photographed live models in a professional photography studio. I’ve usually been on the other side of the lens when it
comes to professional photo studios. I’m the one being photographed, not the one doing the photographing.

We’d spent most of the
day before studying studio lighting basics, familiarizing ourselves with the
vocabulary and physical layout and learning all the finer points of bossing around finicky models and lazy assistants.

By the way, when my
daughter and I were at dinner the other night we were seated across from a
group that included super model Ève Salvail. Salvail, who hails from across the
border in the French-speaking part of Canada, is probably best known for her
shaved head and extensive cranial dragon tattoo, both of which you can see
here. Standing what must be a good foot taller than me, Salvail is indeed quite impressive.

The models we worked
with yesterday do not have dragon tattoos across their heads (though the male model does have the bald part down). But they
were terrific to work with and both helpful and patient with those of us who
have never commanded a studio before.

It’s easy when you work
with attractive people to want to do “beauty” shots. Indeed, most of my young
classmates made photographs that could easily appear in Vogue or Elle. But being
young and fresh and, for the most part, free of the inhibitions of Americans, they
fresh and interesting perspectives to a category in which one has to believe
every possible physical permutation of body shape and clothing has been done
hundreds of times.

I, on the other hand,
followed my traditional “try to do something unexpected” approach and asked my
two models to work with me to create a variety of hostile and aggressive poses.
My studio partner for the day—we alternated as shooters and each other’s
assistant—is a high school chemistry teacher who similarly wanted to shake
things up a little. She had them jump up and down and crawl across the studio floor.

My results for the day
aren’t all that out there. But for
someone who’d never worked with models in a studio before and whose entire previous
lighting experience consisted of shining a flashlight up under my chin on
Halloween--which is, I've learned, known in the studio trade as "Halloween light"--I was pleased that I could remember how to do anything when entrusted with a bunch of wireless devices, several thousand dollars worth of lights and vast expanses of seamless backdrops. These are
just a few of the almost two hundred photographs made during an hour of
shooting. There are lots of really aggressively hostile images. But these were some of the shots I liked the most.

I coud gladly live with the pair of Katrine pix on the wall forever. Stunning and so captivating - and, yes, unusual - and non-agressive (could not have agression on the wall everyday!) Lucky you for this opportunity